Las Vegas Review-Journal

How a 6-second video turned a campus protest into a national firestorm

- By Sharon Otterman

NEW YORK — In the six-second video clip, propalesti­nian protesters are heard chanting and banging at the closed doors of the library at the Cooper Union, a top arts, architectu­re and engineerin­g school in New York City. Inside, a small group of Jewish students looks on nervously.

Then the clip ends. It is the briefest snapshot of a frightenin­g moment at a school of fewer than 1,000 students in Manhattan’s East Village.

But within a couple of hours, images of the encounter Oct. 25 spread globally on social media. The pro-palestinia­n protesters had dispersed a few minutes later, and no one was injured or arrested, but the story seemed to grow more dire the farther it traveled. Posts that went viral falsely claimed that the library had been barricaded to protect the students inside from an angry mob and that police were afraid to get involved.

The Cooper Union protest quickly became a symbol, to some, of rising antisemiti­sm on American college campuses during the Israel-hamas war. The Cooper Union, typically low profile, was mentioned repeatedly at a Republican presidenti­al debate.

Now, amid questions from Congress about how campuses are reckoning with antisemiti­sm, the Cooper Union is one of more than a dozen colleges under federal investigat­ion after complaints of discrimina­tion.

And with campus speech under an intense public microscope, the episode at the library and its aftermath show how a brief moment, free of context or nuance, can be repurposed by partisans in service of broader political rhetoric during a war in which informatio­n is an important weapon.

“Off-campus groups are very motivated to weaponize these protests,” said Angus Johnston, a historian of student activism at Hostos Community College in the Bronx. But the stakes of campus activism are now perilous. “What, 20 or 30 years ago, could have been an incident that nobody would find out about unless they were actually there has now become one that can be circulated globally and be a life-changing experience.”

The Cooper Union has a proud tradition of activism. Abraham Lincoln gained momentum in his presidenti­al campaign with an antislaver­y speech there in 1860. In 2013, students occupied the college president’s office for 65 days to protest a plan to charge tuition at the school.

But like many colleges around the country, the school struggled to respond to the Israel-hamas war in a way that satisfied a deeply divided student body.

After Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel, Laura Sparks, president of the Cooper Union, published a message expressing outrage over the “violent and deadly terrorist attacks on Israeli people by Hamas.” But as the death toll mounted in the Gaza Strip, some students felt the school was not doing enough to acknowledg­e Palestinia­n civilian deaths or the war’s wider context.

Among them was Mathieu Magloire-wilson, 21, an art student who spent five months as an exchange student in Jerusalem.

A printmaker from New Jersey and the president of the school’s Black Student Union, he began printing and distributi­ng small books with articles about conditions in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Soon, students on both sides of the conflict were putting up posters and images of Palestinia­n or Israeli flags around campus. Many were taken down.

By Oct. 25, the day of the library encounter, the climate on campus was tense.

At 1 p.m. that day, about 70 students left class as part of a national pro-palestinia­n student walkout, forming a semicircle outside and chanting. About 20 pro-israel counterpro­testers lined up between the pro-palestinia­n protesters and the school.

Three hours later, roughly 20 of the pro-palestinia­n protesters went inside — past security guards who told them to stop, video shows — to bring demands, including that the college call for a cease-fire and end its exchange program with Israel, to the college president on the seventh floor. Sparks locked her door but told police that she did not feel threatened and allowed the protest to continue, police said.

While the protest continued upstairs, some of the pro-israel protesters went into the library, according to a college official who reviewed security footage.

After nearly an hour, the pro-palestinia­n protesters went downstairs and reached the library on the ground floor. A security guard shut its large gray doors and stood outside them.

In interviews, protesters said they did not know who was inside when they came to the doors and were only angry about being kept out. They banged on the doors in time to their repetitive chant, “Free, free Palestine.”

“In no way was this an attack on Jewish people, Judaism, Jewish students or faculty members,” Magloire-wilson said. The protesters, he said, see themselves as standing up for the Palestinia­n people.

But inside the library, the view was different. Students were visibly worried by the banging on the doors. It was then that the six-second video was recorded.

Several pro-palestinia­n protesters and at least one Jewish student said in interviews they believed the doors were locked. But the school said later that security footage showed they were not.

After two minutes, protesters moved to a glass wall along the side of the library. It was only then, they said, that they noticed some of the Jewish counterpro­testers were inside. For about seven minutes, they held up posters, banged cardboard tubes and chanted, the school said.

Two of the students inside the library sat down at a table inches from the glass, a video shows. “Hey, let’s get a picture,” another student can be heard saying.

There is nervous laughter and also concern.

“This is not peaceful,” a young woman says. One asks if police were there.

After the protesters left, the library doors remained closed for 20 minutes — not to protect anyone, the school said, but to minimize disruption for people studying and working there. Police had been there the whole time and said there had been no cause to intervene. “At no time were they yelling out that they wanted to kill people,” Carlos Nieves, assistant commission­er for the Police Department, later said.

Within minutes, though, the campus dust-up had taken on a life of its own, embroiling students in a pitched national discussion about free speech and antisemiti­sm on campus.

Jake Novak, a pro-israel media personalit­y with thousands of followers, posted the video that would go viral on the social platform X.

“BREAKING NOW: my sources tell me several Jewish students @cooperunio­n are currently locked in the school library as a pro Hamas rally outside of the cooper Union building learnt the Jews were afraid and sitting in the library, then brought the protest inside and are barricadin­g all exits,” he wrote, after the event was already over.

He tagged major media outlets to get their attention.

Each post seemed to add more false details: that the Jewish students had escaped via a secret tunnel, for example, or had hidden in an attic.

Magloire-wilson had his picture and name published in a social media post that accused him of “orchestrat­ing the mob attack” against the Jewish students. His social media accounts were soon filled with racist insults and threats. Someone sent him a picture of a noose. He said he was frightened that someone might harm him and worried about his future.

“An unfortunat­e thing about this is that it’s happening at such a large scale, this system of doxxing and forcing young students and people into this awful position,” he said.

The day after the protest, supporters of the Jewish students held a news conference calling for Sparks to resign.

The student who shot the six-second video, Taylor Roslyn Lent, was interviewe­d on Fox News. She said that although she wasn’t typically threatened by pro-palestinia­n protests, she had felt threatened “when there were chants calling for the murder of Jews being chanted at me from my fellow students.”

(During the protest outside the school, students chanted slogans, including the disputed phrase, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” but they denied they were calling for violence.)

Ziporah Reich, director of litigation for the Lawfare Project, a pro bono legal organizati­on, denied requests for interviews with Lent and the other Jewish students it was representi­ng in a possible civil litigation against the school. She said her clients were the clear victims, and disputed details given by the school and police.

Amy Binder, a sociologis­t at Johns Hopkins who researches student activism, said disputes between students had become fodder for a growing number of organizati­ons, most of them right-leaning, that call out political behavior they don’t support on campuses.

“It is incredibly divisive,” she said.

At the Cooper Union, the episode has further frayed trust between students on campus. A spokespers­on, Kim Newman, said an internal review of the events was underway.

“There is no tolerance here for discrimina­tion, harassment or intimidati­on of any kind,” she said.

 ?? JOHN HUDSON WHITE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Student protesters chant and bang on the glass wall of a library at the Cooper Union in New York during a pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ion Oct. 25. Both pro-palestinia­n and pro-israel students who participat­ed in the protest have said the events left them feeling fearful. But disinforma­tion that spread on social media blew the event out of proportion to make the situation sound more dangerous and violent than it was.
JOHN HUDSON WHITE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Student protesters chant and bang on the glass wall of a library at the Cooper Union in New York during a pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ion Oct. 25. Both pro-palestinia­n and pro-israel students who participat­ed in the protest have said the events left them feeling fearful. But disinforma­tion that spread on social media blew the event out of proportion to make the situation sound more dangerous and violent than it was.
 ?? AMIR HAMJA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mathieu Magloire-wilson joined the pro-palestinia­n protest and said he and his fellow students had not meant it as an attack against Jewish classmates.
AMIR HAMJA / THE NEW YORK TIMES Mathieu Magloire-wilson joined the pro-palestinia­n protest and said he and his fellow students had not meant it as an attack against Jewish classmates.

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